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Date:      Thu, 4 May 2000 01:15:30 +0000 (GMT)
From:      Terry Lambert <tlambert@primenet.com>
To:        brett@lariat.org (Brett Glass)
Cc:        allenc@verinet.com (Allen Campbell), freebsd-chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Naw, Netscape doesn't have a memory problem!
Message-ID:  <200005040115.SAA02317@usr01.primenet.com>
In-Reply-To: <4.3.1.2.20000503120120.0410c100@localhost> from "Brett Glass" at May 03, 2000 12:04:11 PM

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> >I've installed Netscape 6 beta 1 on winblows 95 and 98, Debian
> >(2.2) and Caldera.  What are you talking about?  Perhaps you've
> >nurtured some kludged up mess of a box that's unlikely to run
> >notepad with any stability?  
> 
> Nonsense. This was after a clean install of Windows 98 SE on
> a new 600 MHz Athlon. The machine runs everything else perfectly.

There's no such thing as a "clean" install of Windows 98.

I've become convinced that Windows 98 was intentionally
destabilized in order to promote sales of Windows 2000; you
are more likely to put up with the performance hit from the
98 to 2000 switch if it makes your system more stable.

A large corporation who shall remain nameless and therefore
blameless has a policy of deploying only Windows 95 on new
systems, for stability reasons.

FWIW, I have seen Netscape crash a number of times.  If you
run IE while running Netscape, you will almost inevitably
get a "this program has performed an illegal operation error",
wiithe the "Details>>" button showing that the error occured
"VCRTL42.DLL" (the Visual C++ run time library) or "KERNEL32.DLL"
(the Windows kernel).


> >I keep hearing this predictable blather
> >about Netscape 6 and wondering just how cruel I have to be to a
> >system to reproduce these `crashes', but I have yet to experience
> >it.  It's certainly not perfect but it rivals 4.x for stability.
> 
> Not in my experience. Netscape's best developers are gone, and AOL
> cares little about it since it's not a money maker. Frankly, I'm
> surprised that they haven't just killed it off as a sacrifice to
> the Great God Microsoft. Or maybe that's what they're doing --
> in an unusually slow and painful manner.

I doubt it.  It's probably just programmer availability; working
for AOL is just not as sexy as working for Netscape was.  A lot
of big companies are in the same boat, with money to burn for
people but no people lining up to take it.


					Terry Lambert
					terry@lambert.org
---
Any opinions in this posting are my own and not those of my present
or previous employers.


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